What Great .NET Developers Ought To Know (http://www.hanselman.com/blog/WhatGreatNETDevelopersOughtToKnowMoreN ETInterviewQuestions.aspx) (http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000073.html) (http://www.scottberkun.com/essays/39-how-to-interview-and-hire-people/)
Everyone who writes code 1. Describe the difference between a Thread and a Process? 2. What is a Windows Service and how does its lifecycle differ from a "standard" EXE? Windows service is an application that runs in the background. It is equivalent to a NT service. The executable created is not a Windows application , and hence you can't just click and run it. It has been need to be installed a service, and VB.Net has a facility where we can add an installer to our program and then use a utility to install the service. Where as this is not the case with standard exe
3. What is the maximum amount of memory any single process on Windows can address? Is this different than the maximum virtual memory for the system? How would this affect a system design? Actually processes access virtual memory space, not physical memory. Applications never access RAM directly but only through the memory management interface of the processor. All processes have a 4GB virtual address space. The upper 2GB is common to all processes and is used by the system. The lower 2GB is private to each process and is inaccessible to all others. This is completely independent of the size of RAM or the page file. The system maps physical memory into this virtual address space according to both need and availability. At any given time the data in virtual memory space might be stored in RAM, on disk, or both. All of this is totally transparent to all applications. Frequently accessed data will be kept in RAM with the remainder left on disk. 4. What is the difference between an EXE and a DLL? An ActiveX Dll runs is an in process server running in the same memory space as the client process. An ActiveX Exe is an out of process server which runs in it's own separate
memory space. Exe is generally a background server that doesn't have any user interface (UI).
5. What is strong-typing versus weak-typing? Which is preferred? Why? The answer above is wrong in several respects - it describes static versus dynamic typinng rather than strong versus weak typing (a common confusion). Weak typing is where a language allows you to treat blocks of memory defined as one type as another (casting). Languages like C and C++, although statically typed, are weakly typed. Languages like Perl and PHP are weakly typed because you can do things like adding numbers to strings and the language will do an implicit coercion for you. Languages like Java, C# and Python are strongly typed - there is no way you can add a number to a string without doing an explicit conversion. In addition, there are many large systems that have been created with dynamic type systems. Catching type errors (typos) at compile time only catches a very small proportion of errors and a strong testing strategy produces much more reliable systems irrespective of the type system in use. Strong type is checking the types of variables at compile time. weak typing is checking the types of the system at run-time. For scripts & quick stuff we'll use weak typing, In big programs, strong typing can reduce errors at compile time 6. Corillian's product is a "Component Container." Name at least 3 component containers that ship now with the Windows Server Family. 7. What is a PID? How is it useful when troubleshooting a system? 8. How many processes can listen on a single TCP/IP port? 9. What is the GAC? What problem does it solve?
Mid-Level .NET Developer 1. Describe the difference between Interface-oriented, Object-oriented and Aspectoriented programming. 2. Describe what an Interface is and how it’s different from a Class. 3. What is Reflection? 4. What is the difference between XML Web Services using ASMX and .NET Remoting using SOAP? 5. Are the type system represented by XmlSchema and the CLS isomorphic?
6. Conceptually, what is the difference between early-binding and late-binding? 7. Is using Assembly.Load a static reference or dynamic reference? 8. When would using Assembly.LoadFrom or Assembly.LoadFile be appropriate? 9. What is an Asssembly Qualified Name? Is it a filename? How is it different? 10. Is this valid? Assembly.Load("foo.dll"); 11. How is a strongly-named assembly different from one that isn’t strongly-named? 12. Can DateTimes be null? 13. What is the JIT? What is NGEN? What are limitations and benefits of each? 14. How does the generational garbage collector in the .NET CLR manage object lifetime? What is non-deterministic finalization? 15. How is the using() pattern useful? What is IDisposable? How does it support deterministic finalization? 16. What does this useful command line do? tasklist /m "mscor*" 17. What is the difference between in-proc and out-of-proc? 18. What technology enables out-of-proc communication in .NET? 19. When you’re running a component within ASP.NET, what process is it running within on Windows XP? Windows 2000? Windows 2003?
Senior Developers/Architects 1. 2. 3. 4.
What’s wrong with a line like this? DateTime.Parse(myString); What are PDBs? Where must they be located for debugging to work? What is cyclomatic complexity and why is it important? Write a standard lock() plus “double check” to create a critical section around a variable access. 5. What is FullTrust? Do GAC’ed assemblies have FullTrust? 6. What benefit does your code receive if you decorate it with attributes demanding specific Security permissions? 7. What does this do? gacutil /l | find /i "Corillian" 8. What does this do? sn -t foo.dll 9. What ports must be open for DCOM over a firewall? What is the purpose of Port 135? 10. Contrast OOP and SOA. What are tenets of each? 11. How does the XmlSerializer work? What ACL permissions does a process using it require? 12. Why is catch(Exception) almost always a bad idea? 13. What is the difference between Debug.Write and Trace.Write? When should each be used? 14. What is the difference between a Debug and Release build? Is there a significant speed difference? Why or why not? 15. Does JITting occur per-assembly or per-method? How does this affect the working set? 16. Contrast the use of an abstract base class against an interface? 17. What is the difference between a.Equals(b) and a == b? 18. In the context of a comparison, what is object identity versus object equivalence? 19. How would one do a deep copy in .NET?
20. Explain current thinking around IClonable. 21. What is boxing? 22. Is string a value type or a reference type? 23. What is the significance of the "PropertySpecified" pattern used by the XmlSerializer? What problem does it attempt to solve? 24. Why are out parameters a bad idea in .NET? Are they? 25. Can attributes be placed on specific parameters to a method? Why is this useful?
C# Component Developers 1. Juxtapose the use of override with new. What is shadowing? 2. Explain the use of virtual, sealed, override, and abstract. 3. Explain the importance and use of each component of this string: Foo.Bar, Version=2.0.205.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=593777ae2d274679d 4. Explain the differences between public, protected, private and internal. 5. What benefit do you get from using a Primary Interop Assembly (PIA)? 6. By what mechanism does NUnit know what methods to test? 7. What is the difference between: catch(Exception e){throw e;} and catch(Exception e){throw;} 8. What is the difference between typeof(foo) and myFoo.GetType()? 9. Explain what’s happening in the first constructor: public class c{ public c(string a) : this() {;}; public c() {;} } How is this construct useful? 10. What is this? Can this be used within a static method?
ASP.NET (UI) Developers 1. Describe how a browser-based Form POST becomes a Server-Side event like Button1_OnClick. 2. What is a PostBack? 3. What is ViewState? How is it encoded? Is it encrypted? Who uses ViewState? 4. What is the <machinekey> element and what two ASP.NET technologies is it used for? 5. What three Session State providers are available in ASP.NET 1.1? What are the pros and cons of each? 6. What is Web Gardening? How would using it affect a design? 7. Given one ASP.NET application, how many application objects does it have on a single proc box? A dual? A dual with Web Gardening enabled? How would this affect a design? 8. Are threads reused in ASP.NET between reqeusts? Does every HttpRequest get its own thread? Should you use Thread Local storage with ASP.NET? 9. Is the [ThreadStatic] attribute useful in ASP.NET? Are there side effects? Good or bad? 10. Give an example of how using an HttpHandler could simplify an existing design that serves Check Images from an .aspx page.
11. What kinds of events can an HttpModule subscribe to? What influence can they have on an implementation? What can be done without recompiling the ASP.NET Application? 12. Describe ways to present an arbitrary endpoint (URL) and route requests to that endpoint to ASP.NET. 13. Explain how cookies work. Give an example of Cookie abuse. 14. Explain the importance of HttpRequest.ValidateInput()? 15. What kind of data is passed via HTTP Headers? 16. Juxtapose the HTTP verbs GET and POST. What is HEAD? 17. Name and describe at least a half dozen HTTP Status Codes and what they express to the requesting client. 18. How does if-not-modified-since work? How can it be programmatically implemented with ASP.NET? 19. Explain <@OutputCache%> and the usage of VaryByParam, VaryByHeader. 20. How does VaryByCustom work? 21. How would one implement ASP.NET HTML output caching, caching outgoing versions of pages generated via all values of q= except where q=5 (as in http://localhost/page.aspx?q=5)?
Developers using XML 1. 2. 3. 4.
What is the purpose of XML Namespaces? When is the DOM appropriate for use? When is it not? Are there size limitations? What is the WS-I Basic Profile and why is it important? Write a small XML document that uses a default namespace and a qualified (prefixed) namespace. Include elements from both namespace. 5. What is the one fundamental difference between Elements and Attributes? 6. What is the difference between Well-Formed XML and Valid XML? 7. How would you validate XML using .NET? 8. Why is this almost always a bad idea? When is it a good idea? myXmlDocument.SelectNodes("//mynode"); 9. Describe the difference between pull-style parsers (XmlReader) and eventingreaders (Sax) 10. What is the difference between XPathDocument and XmlDocument? Describe situations where one should be used over the other. 11. What is the difference between an XML "Fragment" and an XML "Document." 12. What does it meant to say “the canonical” form of XML? 13. Why is the XML InfoSet specification different from the Xml DOM? What does the InfoSet attempt to solve? 14. Contrast DTDs versus XSDs. What are their similarities and differences? Which is preferred and why? 15. Does System.Xml support DTDs? How? 16. Can any XML Schema be represented as an object graph? Vice versa?